
Alice Hamilton chose medicine because "as a doctor I could go anywhere I pleased
- to far - off lands or to city slums - and be quite sure I could be of use
anywhere." She quickly discovered she felt more at home in the laboratory than
at the bedside. Her first job, teaching pathology at Northwestern University,
gave her the chance to realize her dream to live at Hull House. There she came
to know Jane Addams and other reformers who encouraged her to find a way to
apply her scientific knowledge to social problems.
Alice Hamilton began to investigate industrial diseases. She saw cases of lead
palsy and carbon monoxide gassing among workers in the area. Because they were
Poles, Italians, or Blacks, their fate had passed unnoticed. Industries denied
responsibility, and states had no workmen's compensation laws. Dr. Hamilton
conducted pioneering surveys of industrial disease, and found that European
countries not only outdistanced the U.S. in research but also legislated
sickness insurance programs.
She studied the poisons affecting workers in the lead, munitions, and copper
industries, traveling the country and touring mines and factories, smelters and
forges. Her reports were always meticulously fair and impartial . In 1918 Alice
Hamilton was appointed assistant professor of industrial medicine at the Harvard
University Medical School. She was the first and for many years the only woman
on the Harvard faculty. Though she was treated shabbily, excluded from the
faculty club and the commencement procession, her research continued to help
promote safety in the American workplace.
Additional Resources:
Grant, Madeleine P. Alice Hamilton: Pioneer Doctor in Industrial Medicine.
London, New York, etc; Aberlard-Schuman, 1967.
Industrial Poisons in the United States. New York: The Macmillan Company,
1925.
Industrial Toxicology. New York : Harper, 1934.
Exploring the Dangerous Trades. Boston: Little Brown, 1943.
Papers 1910-1952 and 1913-1950, 1 ft. Radcliffe College, The Arthur & Elizabeth
Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America. Cambridge,
Massachusetts.